So when the Hogmanay hangover subsides, who are the technology first foots we can expect knocking at the door?

In part two of our lookahead to 2012, our experts give their insights into the technologies sitting on the horizon.

Robert Scoble - blogger and chief scientist, Rackspace

On the train here I was with an executive from General Electric, and he said a year ago they were very anti-iPad. But in January at their global meeting they're going to hand out iPads.

It is crazy to think about a company that size moving that quickly... the enterprise world is going iPad very quickly.

Image caption
Robert Scoble wonders if Microsoft can stop Apple 'taking over the world'

Next year it's going to be interesting - can Microsoft keep its global position in terms of operating system and stop Apple from taking over the world? And Amazon, because Amazon has the £200 tablet. For consumers it's going to be a tough choice - do we buy a Windows 8 tablet, or an iPad, or an Amazon tablet?

We're seeing socialisation in the enterprise take off, Yammer is having a really good year, and Jive is going public.

I'm just watching Facebook and thinking, I'm not sure about Facebook in terms of enterprise.

Certainly in terms of the businesses I follow - start-ups - they're all building into Facebook's Open Graph technology.

I visited Yahoo recently and they said they're seeing 600% more visits from Facebook because of it.

I think business is going to have to have a Facebook Open Graph strategy next year. Even if we're ignoring it because it's too freaky on the privacy side, they're going to have to at least consider it.

[Another trend is] application ecosystems built on top of the cloud.

If you're a new developer building something about location, you probably want to use Foursquare's database and API. Path does that - when you start saying where you are it's actually using Foursquare inside the Path application.

Image caption
Businesses will have a 'Facebook Open Graph' strategy next year, Mr Scoble says

The trend there is the continuing API-sation of the world - almost lego-isation. Look at Instagram. It hooks into Foursquare, Facebook, Tumblr and others.

There's something happening on my screens that is different. I have three screens. I have Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Quora and Gmail streaming down. The content keeps moving. There's this real-time engine almost.

Image caption
People on the 'real-time' web want answers from the powerful more quickly than ever

Salesforce's CEO Mark Benioff talks about this, you have to have people who deal with this realtimeness of the world. [Consumers] want to tweet at you and get an answer now. They don't want to do it in a day. They'll start making a stink if it takes a day.

I think that's the new normal. It's the real time business. It's this 24-hour-a-day real-time streaming thing.

TV is a big one. A lot of things are happening with TV. We're using iPads or laptops while watching TV, so during the Olympics, for instance, what's that experience going to be like compared to the last one? A lot more people are using Twitter and Facebook than four years ago.

So the social thing is going to be a big one. There's like five start-ups that are trying to be the social TV thing.

Nathaniel Borenstein, author and chief scientist, Mimecast

The user is becoming the king of the cloud. The first wave of cloud computing was really all about efficiency and doing things cheaper.

The next stage is that cloud companies have to compete on some basis other than simple efficiencies.

You lure the customers initially by saying you're more efficient, but if everyone is in the cloud they all have roughly that kind of efficiency. This is where what seems like a very back-end service starts to become much more user-focused.

This is somewhere between a prediction and a hope.

Image caption
Social networking and email are going to become more closely linked, Mr Borenstein predicts

I think it's a prediction but I don't know how fast it's going to happen. It's that social media and email are going to grow more closely integrated.

We've seen all these death of email predictions and rebuttals. I think that eventually something more constructive has to happen. People have to acknowledge from both ends of the debate that there are some things that email is better for, and some things that social media is better at.

A unified interface, if well done, has a lot of appeal.

The third prediction is about the evolution of IT staff.

I'd say you might want to spend some time investigating some cloud companiesNathaniel Borenstein

When the cloud model first started to get hot, one of the worries or the hopes, depending on who you were, was that this was going to destroy IT jobs.

I think that was simplistic. I think there was some truth to it. If you put all your storage to the cloud then you don't need anyone to worry about backups.

I think what's really happening is that the work is bifurcating, and that there's two kinds of IT jobs that are replacing the one old kind. One is the traditional backend stuff, and those people are going to in large part migrate towards cloud companies.

So if that's the business you're in, I'd say you might want to spend some time investigating some cloud companies.

Those that like dealing with the business side of things - these are the people who help the business make intelligent use of the information they've got. They're information architects almost, creating reports that would help us make our business better.

Rashik Parmar, president of the IBM Academy of Technology

Every year, IBM publishes five predictions for the next five years.

Image caption
You'll never need a password again says Mr Parmar

Anything that moves has the ability to make its own energy. So the first is around energy. We say you'll start to find and use your own ways of making energy. We can see the growth in a range of areas, especially in the growth markets, adoption of new technologies that moves us away from traditional fossil fuels.

The next big area is security - the strapline is you'll never need a password again.

The reason people haven't adopted these biometric standards in the past is they've never been accurate enough. By having multi factor capabilities you make it much more viable. There's a tremendous amount of work going on with face, voice and gesture.

One example that we're actually considering - it's not actually there yet - could you walk up to the ATM and say 'please give me £100'? It would know who you were and which account you were talking about and it would then give you the money accordingly.

I think you will start to see more and more biometrics used, especially in the mobile space. There's been fingerprint reader technology brought into various mobile technologies. There are more and more forward facing webcams. In the next two years, you'll probably start to see some kind of facial recognition becoming standard on some handsets.

IBM's five in five - predictions for 2016

Mind reading refers to headsets with advanced sensors to read electrical brain activity. We can see that as technology continues to evolve, you're able to use that more effectively to drive the interface between you and the computer. Initially in the gaming space I think it'll become very much the norm.

Also in areas where you're controlling things like robots or machinery, so the idea is somebody who's lost the use of their legs will be able to control their wheelchair.

The digital divide - what we've seen is a phenomenal investment in broadband and mobile networks that allow large bandwidth, which means that the price point of that will come down to the point where people will have ready access, probably on the handset but certainly in the home.

As a business opportunity the biggest thing is reach. Being able to touch consumers you would otherwise not be able to touch.

In the same way we saw Arab springs we're seeing corporate springs with companies that aren't engaging with their customers.

One recent thing you probably saw was Netflix. They announced they were changing their pricing structure, their customer base revolted. With more than 82,000 negative comments on their blogs and posts, it's become a huge disaster for them.

Five years ago, there would have been no way that customers can really aggregate and work together to give a clear voice to a company.

Graham Hann, partner, intellectual property, Taylor Wessing

Next year sees the bidding open for generic top level domains - gTLDs. This means the likes of Sony could bid for .music or .sony.

I think that's going to be amazing to watch. There's a window of three months to apply, the barrier to entry is quite high and then you have to run a registry. It's big money and it's just for the big players. It's going to be interesting to see who grabs the big brands.

People are going to be able to grab .poker and potentially make a huge amount of money.

A persistent trend for 2012 will be the continued growth of smart mobile devices.

Smart devices are being used for much more than communication, and are increasingly being used as a proxy for our identity.

Smart devices are being used for much more than communication, and are increasingly being used as a proxy for our identityGraham Hann

For example, applications are available to allow smart devices to operate as transaction authentication devices, where a retailer handling a credit or debit card payment by a consumer can use that consumer's smart device location to verify their identity, or security access devices, for example to enter and move around an office environment in place of a swipe card.

I also wonder if location-based marketing will become more prevalent, and you become used to walking into a store and getting special offers.

I wonder if it will become part of the fabric of targeting customers. I think that advertisers will use their location and customers will be less bothered. Legally, It will always have to be consent-based, and I can't see that changing in the next decade, let alone the next year.

What we're seeing continuing is the consumerisation of IT in the enterprise.

Image caption
Companies must get ready for more consumer devices on corporate networks, Mr Shockley says

The bring your own device trend (BYOD) [raises questions] about the technology that corporations have to support and how they're going to operate in a BYOD world.

I've run into lots of customers where the IT department started by saying they weren't going to support that, but at some point when the chief executive says, 'I want to use my Android smartphone', pretty soon IT gets forced to figure out how to deal with that.

All you have to do is take a look at what's popular down at the local High Street store and you're going to see all kinds of new devices and applications that are driving their way into the enterprise.

We took a look at what people were doing with things like World of Warcraft and other gaming environments. You're seeing lots of people having robust conversations and interactions in the consumer world in those apps. We actually saw some enterprises, albeit small start-ups, conducting their meetings in those environments. We've got an application we've created that is a virtual environment based on a gaming engine.

Image caption
Businesses are learning from how people are interacting and coming together in gaming environments

So that's one whole area that you'll see continuing to evolve.

The world has historically been one where technology started in the enterprises and moved into the consumer world.

Now it's the other way around, where you've got billions of consumers pushing accelerated development of technology.